if your PSU is bottom mounted then it can make airflow kind of wonky. not bad necessarily, just weird. Top mounted and there's no difference at all

He means upside down, as in the fan pointing up/down in the bottom of the case, not mounted at the top/bottom of the case.
I don't know of any cases that allow options for mounting your PSU at the top and bottom.

He means upside down, as in the fan pointing up/down in the bottom of the case, not mounted at the top/bottom of the case.
I don't know of any cases that allow options for mounting your PSU at the top and bottom.

He means upside down, as in the fan pointing up/down in the bottom of the case, not mounted at the top/bottom of the case.
I don't know of any cases that allow options for mounting your PSU at the top and bottom.

I was just about to leave, and my supervisor said "hey, think you could do some cable organizing tomorrow?". Not thinking anything of this, I said "Sure!". He tosses me his keys and points me to the closet down the hall.

He means upside down, as in the fan pointing up/down in the bottom of the case, not mounted at the top/bottom of the case.
I don't know of any cases that allow options for mounting your PSU at the top and bottom.

I mean if it's top mounted, making it upside down isn't gonna make a difference. if it's bottom mounted, upside down is weird shit

I gave Flux a try for a week and I think I hate it.
I swear it's making my eyestrain worse. And it only gets in the way. There's no "Disable until I say enable" option, there's only "Disable for an hour." (Discounting turning the program off.)

I gave Flux a try for a week and I think I hate it.
I swear it's making my eyestrain worse. And it only gets in the way. There's no "Disable until I say enable" option, there's only "Disable for an hour." (Discounting turning the program off.)

The client has decided that he doesn't want users to be called "users". He wants them to be called "people". Not just at the interface level (which isn't even our job, thankfully), but in the code and database as well.

The primary database (there's three) has over two dozen tables with "user" in the name. And well over half of the sixty-eight tables in the entire system have a user_id column.

The worst part was that I couldn't do a simple global search/replace, because a) a few times user was actually correct ("CREATE USER isignedanndaandcanttellyouanactualusername ENCRYPTED PASSWORD nope"), and b) the framework we're using would have far too many false positives due to stuff like user agent mechanisms and comments pointing you to the user manual.

The best part was that I could turn to the guy next to me and ask how to make this ignore stuff in .svn folders:

Code:

find . | xargs grep -il 'user' | sort | uniq

And in under a second, he can say

Code:

find . | grep -v '\.svn' | xargs grep -il 'user' | sort | uniq

(I checked the man pages - there doesn't seem to be an easy option in find for 'ignore hidden files and folders', which was my first guess on how to do it)

My school said I failed math and some other class when I have proof I passed and they're too lazy to fix it.

As of today though I brought my GPA up to a 3.4, but I'm only half way though the semester. According to my school's records I have a 1.42 last semester despite me having proof I have a solid 3.0 UGHGGGGGYUHGFDfghddf

My school said I failed math and some other class when I have proof I passed and they're too lazy to fix it.

As of today though I brought my GPA up to a 3.4, but I'm only half way though the semester. According to my school's records I have a 1.42 last semester despite me having proof I have a solid 3.0 UGHGGGGGYUHGFDfghddf